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Other
CA
Civic Admin
01 Jan
Bengaluru
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New Year Resolution 2026 | Civic Opposition of India

  1. Champion Urban Livability: Fight relentlessly for sustainable Indian cities, focusing on Tier 1 and Tier 2 urban centers where infrastructure resilience is critical.

  2. Close the Gap on Basic Services: Systematically highlight and resolve everyday operational failures—roads, footpaths, drainage, and last-mile connectivity—that impact the quality of life for common citizens.

  3. Dismantle Systemic Corruption: Advocate for transparent, digital procurement systems to eliminate the "commission nexus" between contractors and officials in public works.

  4. Protect Our Ecological Commons: defend lakes and green spaces from encroachment through data-backed vigilance and strict legal enforcement.

  5. Demand Data Over Rhetoric: Challenge ruling establishments to move beyond political slogans and deliver measurable, transparent governance.

  6. Enforce Administrative Accountability: Hold administrative leadership accountable for tangible outcomes, ensuring public assets are managed for public good, not personal gain.

  7. Shift Focus from Elections to Execution: Push political representatives to prioritize daily governance and infrastructure delivery over perpetual election management.

  8. Strengthen Local Democracy: Mobilize citizens to protect democratic institutions through constructive, informed engagement rather than apathy.

  9. Cultivate Active Citizenship: Push citizens to move from passive complaining to active ownership of their neighborhoods and civic duties.

  10. Drive Systemic Change: Foster democratic participation through voting, rigorous questioning of power, and sustained, data-driven civic pressure.

#HappyNewYear2026 #HappyNewYear #CivicOPIndia #GovTech #Accountability

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News
CA
Civic Admin
06 Dec
Mahadevapura, Bengaluru
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Another Life Lost to Bengaluru’s Potholes: When Will It End?

It is devastating to read that a 30-year-old techie has lost his life simply because our roads are unfit for travel. This isn't an "accident"; it is a systemic failure.
Civic Opposition of India, has consistently warned that "Bengaluru's roads are killing people." Their words ring tragically true today.
The cycle is predictable: a life is lost, outrage follows, a few potholes are patched, and then silence—until the next tragedy. We demand more than just patchworks. We demand accountability for the engineers and officials responsible for maintaining these death traps. How many more tax-paying citizens must die before we get safe infrastructure? Full coverage. #Bengaluru #RoadSafety #CivicOpposition #PotholeDeath #Accountability #UrbanInfrastructure #Karnataka
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Protests
CA
Civic Admin
13 Apr
Varthur, Bengaluru
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The Cycle of Repair and Despair: Is Bengaluru Broken Beyond Repair?

It is tragic to witness the sheer helplessness of honest taxpayers in this city. We pay our dues, yet we are met with zero accountability and what feels like open loot of public funds.
Civic Opposition of India, points out the uncomfortable reality of our infrastructure: 
"Even if BBMP repairs a road today, it won’t last 3 months. Why? Because they are built substandard, far below the budgeted quality."
This isn't just about potholes; it's about a systemic failure where quality control is non-existent. We are paying first-class taxes for third-class infrastructure.
363
Drive
CA
Civic Admin
12 Dec 2024
Chikkanayakanahalli, Bengaluru
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A Historic Win: When Citizens Threaten to Stop Tax, Leaders Pay from Their Pockets!

For nearly six years, the residents of Halanayakanahalli (off Sarjapur Road) struggled with a broken road filled with 250 potholes. Repeated pleas to the PWD and elected representatives went unheard.
But when the Citizens Movement East Bengaluru mobilized residents to threaten a Property Tax Boycott, the impact was immediate.

In an unprecedented move, 15 members of the Halanayakanahalli Panchayat paid nearly Rs 5 Lakh from their own pockets to fix the road!

Mithilesh Kumar, Founder of Civic Opposition of India, hails this as a definitive proof of concept: "This victory shows that collective bargaining works. When citizens stand united and say #NoRoadNoTax, the system is forced to respond. We applaud volunteer Arif Mudgal and the residents for holding their ground."

This is not just a road repair; it is a lesson in democracy.
#Bengaluru #CitizenPower #Halanayakanahalli #CivicOpposition #NoRoadNoTax #Accountability #SarjapurRoad

7424
Drive
CA
Civic Admin
25 Aug 2023
Chikkanayakanahalli, Bengaluru
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Coordinated Civic Action Leads to On-Ground Progress

Following sustained citizen representations and formal escalation, a joint re-insspection of our long-pending civic issues was conducted as arranged by the Office of the Chief Minister of Karnataka. This visit marks an important step in translating complaints and ground reports into coordinated administrative action.

Multi-Departmental Inspection

The inspection team included officials from multiple departments, reflecting the interlinked nature of the problems faced in the area. Representatives from the Public Works Department (PWD), Bangalore Water Supply and Sewerage Board (BWSSB), the Panchayat, Police, and Traffic departments were present. Importantly, local residents and citizen representatives were also invited to accompany the team, ensuring transparency and real-time validation of on-ground conditions.

The officials walked through the affected stretches, reviewed the state of roads, drainage, and cleanliness, and engaged directly with residents to understand recurring problems rather than relying solely on files or secondary reports.

Key Issues Highlighted on Ground

During the inspection, citizens highlighted several long-standing concerns:

  • Poor road conditions and repeated pothole formation

  • Inadequate drainage leading to waterlogging and sewage overflow

  • Lack of consistent cleanliness monitoring

  • Safety risks due to damaged road surfaces and traffic bottlenecks

These issues have persisted despite repeated complaints, primarily due to fragmented responsibility across departments. The joint inspection helped break this silos-based approach.

Agreed Action Points

After on-site discussions, the following action points were finalized and documented:

Immediate Actions (within 15 days)

  1. Relaying of Doddamara Road The stretch from the Ambedkar statue to Notre Dame Academy will be fully relaid to address long-term surface damage rather than temporary patchwork repairs.

  2. Pothole Repairs  

  3. All potholes from Notre Dame Academy to Dinne Circle will be repaired using concrete and tar to improve durability and road safety.

  4. Regular Cleanliness Monitoring
  5. The Panchayat Development Officer will monitor cleanliness in the area on a regular basis to prevent garbage accumulation and secondary health hazards.

Short-Term Actions (1–2 months)

  1. Drainage System Planning PWD engineers will prepare a Detailed Project Report for a comprehensive drainage solution along Doddamara Road. This is a critical step to ensure that road relaying is not undone by unresolved drainage issues.

Why This Matters

This inspection demonstrates what is possible when citizen feedback is taken seriously and departments are brought together instead of operating in isolation. Roads, drainage, traffic safety, and cleanliness are interconnected issues, and addressing them piecemeal has repeatedly failed.

The presence of multiple departments on the ground, along with citizens, ensured that problems were acknowledged collectively and that responsibility was clearly assigned.

The Road Ahead

While these commitments are encouraging, timely execution is what will determine success. Citizens will continue to monitor progress against the agreed timelines and follow up where necessary. Transparency, documentation, and public communication will remain central to this effort.

Acknowledgement

We thank the offices of the Chief Minister and the Deputy Chief Minister, along with all concerned officials, for mobilizing different departments and facilitating this coordinated inspection. Constructive engagement between citizens and the administration is essential for building safer, healthier, and more liveable neighbourhoods.

This process reinforces a simple truth: when citizens stay engaged and governance responds with accountability, tangible improvements are possible.

#CitizenAction #CivicEngagement #ParticipatoryGovernance #Accountability #GoodGovernance #Bengaluru #BrandBengaluru

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